I am not content to sit on the sidelines while the government gradually usurps the very essence of parental rights. I hope you share my determination. We need to stand with people like Scott and Jodi Ferris (obviously no relation to someone named Farris). Here’s their story:

Jodi went into labor a bit earlier than she had expected—and the baby was coming rapidly. Given their location and other factors, the midwife they had hoped would deliver the baby at their home encouraged them to get in an ambulance and head to the hospital.

Their baby, whom I will call “Annie,” was born in the ambulance in the parking lot of the Hershey Medical Center—a government hospital in Pennsylvania. Hospital personnel arrived very quickly and took charge of both baby and mom.

As any mother would do, Jodi immediately began to ask the nurses and attendants how her baby was doing. The hospital staff was utterly unresponsive. When they started to give Jodi an injection, she asked what it was and what it was for. They gave her vague answers like, “It’s just to help.” Only after giving her the injection of oxytocin did they tell her what it was and then asked, “You aren’t allergic to that are you?”

Jodi persisted in asking about Annie. No one would tell her anything other than “she’s in good hands and you’ll be able to see her soon.”

Eventually a doctor told her that Annie scored a 9 on a physical exam applied to newborns known as the APGAR test. A score of 8 or higher is considered healthy. (It is unclear when the score was given since she was in the ambulance at birth.) But shortly after this a different doctor told Jodi that Annie was “very sick” and would need to stay in the hospital. This doctor’s comments were accompanied by an explanation of his disdain for midwives saying, “Too many people think they know what they’re doing.”

About an hour later, another hospital staffer finally brought Annie to Jodi and said, “The baby is doing good. She will be able to go home in no time.”

Legal Requirements?

However, several hours later yet another staffer told Scott and Jodi that Annie would have to stay in the hospital for 48 to 72 hours for observation. Even though they persisted in asking why Annie would need to stay, his only answer was that “the law requires us to keep the baby for 48 hours.” When they asked for a reference to this supposed law, he answered, “you’ll have to get that from risk management.” (By the way, there is no such law in Pennsylvania.)

The risk management staffer eventually told them that even though they saw nothing wrong with the baby, they just like “to keep babies like this” for 48–72 hours. The Ferrises were told that Annie would not be released for this period since it was “unsafe for her to leave the hospital.”

Eventually, a risk management staffer admitted that the risk that was being managed was not the health of Annie but the risk that the hospital might get sued if something went wrong after she was discharged.

Ultimately, risk management said that they would be satisfied with a 24-hour stay and that Jodi and Scott could remain with the baby overnight.

You have been Accused

Late in the afternoon, a government social worker named Angelica Lopez-Heagy came into Jodi’s room announcing that she was there to conduct an investigation. Jodi asked to know the allegations. The social worker claimed that it would be against the law for her to show Jodi the allegations.

Jodi replied that she would not be comfortable answering the questions if she couldn’t know the allegations. Immediately the social worker proclaimed, “Since you’re not going to cooperate, I’ll just go and call the police and we can take custody of the baby.”

Fearing that the social worker would carry out her threat, Jodi replied that she was willing to cooperate.

The social worker soon intimated that the issue was Jodi’s refusal to consent to medical treatment for the baby. Jodi replied that she had no idea why anyone would say that. The social worker claimed that she had refused to allow a Vitamin K shot for Annie. Jodi replied that no one had asked her about such a shot. Moreover, she had overheard hospital staffers saying that they had already given Annie such a shot.

Neither the social worker nor any hospital staffer ever gave Jodi or Scott any example of any medically necessary treatment that they had refused for Annie.

At this point, Scott left the hospital to tend to their older children who were staying with friends.

Ordering Tests

Shortly after this, the hospital asked to check Annie’s white blood cell count and to perform a strep test. Jodi agreed to the testing.

Then the hospital demanded that they give Annie shot for Hepatitis B. Jodi said that she would agree only if they tested her or Annie to see if either of them were positive. If so, then she was quite willing to have the shot for Annie. The hospital claimed that they had forgotten about this earlier when it was still possible to test that day, and that they needed to give the shot anyway without any testing.

When the social worker pressed her to make an immediate decision about this shot, Jodi asked her if they could simply wait until Scott got back before they decided.

Put yourself in Jodi’s shoes at this moment. You gave birth that morning in an ambulance. The hospital has made wild and conflicting claims about your baby’s health all day long. You are exhausted. You are in pain. Your husband has gone to check on your children. And a social worker who has threatened to take your baby into police custody is standing in your hospital room demanding that you make an immediate decision.

The social worker renewed her threat. If Jodi would not answer her question right then, she would call the police. And then the social worker started adding conditions. She and Scott would have to agree to sign a safety plan before she could conclude her investigation.

Jodi said that she wanted her husband and an attorney to look at the plan. She felt she was in no position to read such a document and really understand what she was being pressured to sign.

Thrown Out

And then the story turns ugly.

The social worker left the room and called the police. Without a court order they took custody of Annie, immediately claiming that she was suffering from illness or injury—a patently false claim.

The social worker consented to the administration of the Hepatitis B shot even though no blood test had been done.

The police made Jodi Ferris get up out of her hospital bed and escorted her to the entrance—they were expelling her from the hospital because she had not signed the “safety plan.”

Scott met her at the entrance to the hospital. The police escorted them both off of the grounds of the hospital.

Jodi was told that she would be allowed to return every three hours to nurse the baby through the night.

Jodi and Scott were forced to spend the night that she had given birth in their car in the parking lot of a nearby Wal-Mart. You read that right. They kicked this mother out of the hospital, and in order to be close enough to feed her child, she had to sleep in the car.

To add insult to injury, Jodi was given access to Annie only sporadically and not every three hours.

Baby Returned

The next morning a judicial officer held a shelter care hearing. After hearing the evidence, the officer immediately returned custody of Annie to her parents.

No parents should be put through this kind of ordeal. It is not a crime to ask questions about the well-being of your child. It is not a crime to ask for testing to ensure that a procedure is needed before it is done. It is not a crime to be a protective mom.

It is a moral offense of the highest order to kick a mother out of a hospital and to seize her child on the day of her birth simply because a mom wanted to have her husband read a legal document before she signed.

Both the medical personnel and the social worker engaged in outrageous behavior toward this family.

And we believe that they violated their rights under the Constitution of the United States. And we are going to court to prove it.

Why is HSLDA fighting for parental rights in this context? It is not a homeschooling case.

Parental Rights at Risk

We are taking this case because we are tired of seeing the erosion of parental rights in virtually every area of life. Parental rights in medical cases have an impact on broader parental rights, including educational decisions.

And the plain fact is this: If we don’t fight for parental rights, it is probable that our rights will be eroded bit by bit until there is nothing that remains.

We cannot afford to fund cases like this out of HSLDA’s membership dues. We are taking this case because we believe that our members and friends will stand with Jodi and Scott Ferris. We believe that parents should not be punished by “over-the-top” social workers and doctors.

The social worker’s priority was not the welfare of Annie, but her own convenience and her own perception of her power. She was aiming to teach this homeschooling mother a lesson.

And the hospital was clearly not concerned that Annie had a medical issue—they were just trying to avoid being sued for medical malpractice.

When government workers run over parents in cases like this, the lesson that needs to be taught is to the government.

This case will cost tens of thousands of dollars. Your tax-deductible gifts to the Homeschool Freedom Fund of the Home School Foundation will make it possible for us to take this case to court and to try to establish a precedent that will help protect us all.

All of our families are at risk when the government is allowed to run over one of us. When we stand together, we can fight back for freedom and for truth.

Thanks for giving as the Lord leads you. And pray for us. This is not an easy case. We really need your ongoing prayers.

We recently encountered a bit of this when our son's eldest came on a Friday evening. Everything went great. Then there was Saturday, and that was also OK. Then, they were to be released Sunday, but you have to pay the state fee for filing the birth registration. With no clerk available on the weekend you must pay with a check, not cash nor a credit card!

Well, doggone, they forgot their check. In fact, they didn't even know you'd ever need a check. The penalty appeared to be the hospital taking custody of the baby for another day!

I had midwifery care for all or part of several pregnancies. Babies are born on the way to the hospital quite often. Now maybe it was a lay midwife who rubs the medical establishment the wrong way, but the mother went to the hospital.

There are many many women who get no prenatal care, show up at the hospital in labor and go home with their babies with no legal difficulty in spite of nurses and doctors thinking, well this woman has no business having babies.

Pennsylvania does permit Certified Professional Midwives to attend home births.

Funny, Giving Hep B vaccines to newborns doesn’t sound right to me. Was there any reason to give your grand son Hep B vaccine? Does your daughter/daughter in law have Hep B? If not, does it not seem like a bad idea to give a newborn multiple vaccinations for a disease they have almost no chance of being exposed to? You do realize that it is transmitted via blood/semen and most newborns through at least 10 years of age SHOULD NOT be coming into contact with those things or doing IV drugs.

The first big screwing I took in business was at the hands of an ER doc. It was his partner who gave me to understand the “minor deity” thing. Later he actually opened a leech-therapy clinic or something like that.

The doctor restricted me from driving and threatened that I got behind the wheel of a car without his authorization, he would contact the motor vehicle department and have them take my license (and maybe my car).

Been there too. If you go to the eye doctor for reading glasses and he says your distance vision isn't up to snuff, see what happens when you refuse to purchase a pair for that. He'll threaten to report you to motor vehicle.

We are losing our freedoms. Do not answer truthfully when a doctor asks if you own guns, or if you operate a motor vehicle. Such questions are not innocuous.

I had to deal with nitwit social workers when I was 10 or 11 years old back in the late 1960s. My mom died when I was 5,and my pop crawled into his bottle of booze. My brother and me were sent here and there and shuffled around like furniture. When I was with my dad the singing social workers would arrive and ask stupid questions and sing them in your face. “Did you eat today?” I would always say yes because if I said no,off to another foster home. They would show up and bring us used clothes that were old,plaid and funky and if I wore them to school I would be a laughing stock.

I am married to an LCSW that was the case manager for the ICU/NICU at a major hospital. She was also an Adult Protective and Child Protective worker. She is currently the Psychosocial director for 30+ facilities. I was a trusted adviser to DHS/DPHE/HCPF for over 10 years. I wrote many of the systems used within those programs. Dad was the chief of medical for the Air Force and my brother is a Colonel with NHS. I know exactly what I am talking about. You idiots and your conspiracy theories are always full of crap. There is always a story you don’t tell when these stories are told, such as prior contact with social services. I’ve heard countless stories of such persons claiming all kinds of wild things. They even do so in court. It never ceased to amaze the wife when she had to go to court and hear their wild accusations. They claim they are the innocent victim only to discover their story leaves out important details.

72
posted on 03/28/2012 10:57:24 AM PDT
by CodeToad
(I'm so right-wing if I lifted my left leg I'd go into a spin.)

Hospital staff cannot “take custody”. In fact some babies have died because a parent refused treatment. Anyone can petition a court for emergency protective orders but hospitals cannot take charge over a life. Being in a hospital doesn’t change the law. A doctor or other hospital staff cannot simply take you over your will, not outside a hospital and not in it, either. Mental health holds when you are a danger to yourself or others still requires follow up through the legal process.

Not to mention the financial issues as to why police,county, and medical staff refuse to even issue holds: Money. Once they take custody using the mental health statutes they pay the costs. They don’t either have the money or don’t want to spend it.

74
posted on 03/28/2012 11:03:43 AM PDT
by CodeToad
(I'm so right-wing if I lifted my left leg I'd go into a spin.)

My babies were NOT allowed to leave my room unless my husband accompanied them. I always left as soon as possible. A healthy woman who just gave birth is not “ill”. I hated being told what I was “allowed” to do by a bunch of snotty women. I just did what I wanted anyway. I’ve rarely had nice nurses during my six hospital stays.

Not exactly true - when a nurse or other staffer picks up the child, they, in a very real sense, “take custody” of that newborn. When they then take that child out of the mother’s presence and view, they DEFINATELY have “taken custody”.

No, they are not the legal guardian - which is what I think you meant - but they HAVE taken custody of the child.

The nurses threw fits when they saw me eating and drinking water. I used the Julie Tupler method of labor and delivery prep, a method that encourages moms to prepare physically for labor. The example she gives is that one does not simply go run a marathon, one must train for many months to be prepared to run the long distance. Although my firt l&d was precipitous (68 minutes), my second was six hours. I had my first out in four pushes and my second out in six pushes. The nurses kept telling me to tuck my chin to curl up to push and I refused and did my own thing. The doc was pissed when I refused an epesiotomy (sp?). Guess what. Turns out I didn’t need one. She was also a pusher. My husband had to pull her aside and tell her to quit telling me I needed an epidural. After everything was said and done, nurses and doc told me that my deliveries were so easy and pleasant. I told them about the Tupler method I studied and they rolled their eyes. They just don’t want to be contradicted with new options that work.

It’s possible but EXTREMELY rare for something like that to happen. When I did my internship with DFS there was a case I was involved in where a woman came into the ER with her baby and the doctor took immediate emergency custody of the child to keep the woman from leaving with the baby. The DFS case managers that I worked with were stunned that a doctor would do that, My immediate supervisor said flat out “It is nearly ungeard of for that to happen”. The reason for this was because the mother was upset that a hotline call had been made because the story of “She fell in the bathtub”, didn’t match with the symptoms of Shaken baby syndrome that the child presented.

82
posted on 03/28/2012 1:39:48 PM PDT
by chae
(I was anti-Obama before it was cool)

You would be surprised how the situation changes when you pick up a cellphone or videocamera and ask the social worker, nurse, or physician to repeat their demands and threats “for the record”.

It also helps to assert that they are overstepping their rightful bounds, and ask to see their supervisor.

As for shots, when you sign the admission forms, add a line that says you must approved each medication separately; then remind the nurse or physician that “informed consent” requires you to be specifically iinformed about each medication, and that giving medication to either you or your baby without your express consent is criminal assault ... of course, while it is being recorded.

A lot of this stuff would end immediately if it were recorded. And the Supreme Court has agreed that citizens have the right to record any interaction with a public servant.

I don’t like the thought of my grand-baby having any of the vaccinations either because there are risks, even if not huge ones.

But my boys had the vaccinations and they’re strong and healthy - both of them over 6’2” and 180 pounds! And they’re intelligent and hard-working conservatives to boot, thankfully!

However I do understand what you’re saying and it is very frustrating about the extreme views, makes it tough. When you’re doing internet research, try keeping in mind that the info may be coming from someone with an agenda. So maybe it would ease your mind if you were able to talk to other parents at church, peds office, etc., regarding pros and cons.

Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.